Debbie Humphries, PhD, MPH, MA
Assistant Professor Adjunct of Epidemiology (Chronic Diseases)Cards
About
Research
Overview
Dr. Humphries has a broad background in public health practice. She has consulting expertise in the areas of diet and physical activity behavior change, sustainability of community health programs, program monitoring and evaluation, and training in participatory monitoring and evaluation.
Dr. Humphries has research experience in relationships between nutritional deficiencies and infectious disease in resource-poor environments. She is interested in interdisciplinary research on nutrition, immune function, and disease.
Engaging with students in the classroom, on theses and internships provides Dr. Humphries with valuable insights and the opportunity to investigate different perspectives and approaches. She has supported students in conducting research in topics as varied as mapping access to health centers in Burkina Faso, developing a game for teaching communities about malaria transmission, mapping access to food and cigarettes in Almaty, Kazakhstan, and policy approaches to reducing the diabetes impact in India. She enjoys experimenting in the classroom with pedagogical methods that combine academic concepts with practical experience.
Relationship between hookworm infection, response to treatment, and nutritional status in school children in Ghana; measures of research capacity for community based organizations; impact of public health resource sharing on service cost and quality in Connecticut and Massachusetts
Medical Research Interests
Public Health Interests
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
News
News
- April 12, 2023
Applied public health practice course supports students and communities
- July 13, 2022
Alumni Profile: Haeyoon Chang, MPH '18 (Chronic Disease Epidemiology)
- November 05, 2021
Environmental Justice Conference Explores a Just Recovery
- September 23, 2021
Implementation Science Hub Led by Yale Center for Methods in Implementation and Prevention Science Researchers Renewed and New Ending the HIV Epidemic Community Project Launched